by gg3 » Wed 26 Jan 2005, 23:00:41
Huxley was one of the most brilliant thinkers and writers of the 20th century. See also _The Perennial Philosophy_, his most in-depth work on the subject of religion. See also _Ape and Essence_, and various other works.
Huxley was a rationalist in the tradition of the 18th century Enlightenment, a mystic in the strictest sense of one who seeks direct knowledge of God or the Ground of Being (rather than indirect, as mediated by others' words); one of the earliest to spell out the paradigm that linked psychology to neurobiology, while still embracing the limitless wonder of the human spirit.
He was passionately committed to the principle of liberty and justice for all, and to the highest ideals of both Western and Eastern civilization. In an era where cynics and idealists clashed, he walked a careful middle ground, recognizing that humans at their worst are worse than beasts, but always advancing the idea that we as individuals and societies can, with only a little more effort and attention and awareness, become truly wise.
He died of cancer on the same day that President Kennedy was assassinated, and so the public notice of his passing was eclipsed by the national tragedy. However it could well be said that his early departure was a tragedy comparable in depth if not in degree, as it deprived us of another decade or two of the kind of insight and wisdom that encourage the values of thoughtfulness, reason, and reflection.
Our world today needs more like him, more so than ever before.